Stevenage Property Market: How Q2 2026 Compared with the UK

Stevenage Property Market: How Q2 2026 Compared with the UK

As an agent in the Stevenage property market, I believe it is important to offer local homeowners a balanced and realistic view of both the Stevenage and national property markets.

Far too often in the last few years, national newspaper and social media headlines have focused on doom and gloom, creating the impression that the housing market is on the verge of collapse. Yet when you look beyond the headlines and examine the actual data, a rather different picture emerges. We are going to compare Q2 2026 against Q2 2025 and Q2 2023. Why? Well, 2025 was deemed to be a good post pandemic market and 2023 was a tough post-pandemic market.

National Homes for Sale

One of the ways to assess the health of the British property market is to look at the number of new properties coming onto the market. In the second quarter of 2026 (April, May and June), 488,933 properties were listed for sale across the UK. Interesting when compared to the 484,974 in Q2 2025 and 411,927 in Q2 2023.

The average asking price of a UK property coming onto the market in Q2 2026 was £447k, compared with £449k in Q2 2025 and £436k in Q2 2023, so not a big change either. The level of new instructions/listings entering the property market is an important barometer of market health.
Yet during the financial crisis of 2008, the number of homes coming onto the market surged tremendously, tsunami like, creating a significant imbalance between supply and demand and contributing to falling house prices. Therefore, whilst monitoring the volume of new listings is an important indication of market conditions, one also needs to measure the number of homes available for sale and the number of homes being sold subject to contract.

National homes on the market and the number of homes sold

The average number of homes for sale in the UK in Q2 2026 was 746,300, very similar to 743,100 in Q2 2025, yet much higher than the levels seen in Q2 2023, when 605,500 UK homes were for sale (for context, it was 1.3m in Q2 2008).

Now, let us look at the demand.

In Q2 2026, 311,678 homes sold subject to contract (STC) across the UK for an average price of £369,256. In Q2 2025, the number of homes sold STC was slightly higher (4.9%) at 327,023, albeit with a very similar average sale price of £366,785. Yet when we look at Q2 2023, only 283,817 homes were sold STC, again with a very similar average sale price of £365,111.

So, on the face of it, Q2 2026 has been better than Q2 2023 for the number of homes sold (STC).

Until one realises that even though there has been a 9.82% increase in UK house sales between Q2 2023 and Q2 2026, the number of homes for sale has increased by 23.3% over the same time frame.

The UK property market is still active and buyers are still buying, but there is a big catch: a smaller proportion of the available properties are finding a buyer. That means sellers are facing much greater competition, and simply coming onto the market is no guarantee of a sale.
In this sort of market, realistic pricing is not merely helpful, it is everything. The homes that are correctly priced from day one are the ones attracting attention, generating viewings and securing buyers, while those launched too high risk becoming part of the growing stock that sits unsold.

So, now, let us look how the Stevenage property market has faired over the same period.

Stevenage Property Market Specifics

Locally, in Stevenage (covering the SG1/2 postcodes)…

Starting with supply of properties coming onto the market, 504 new listings came onto the market in Q2 2023, 645 in Q2 2025 and 634 in Q2 2026. This is a 26% increase in new properties coming onto the market in Q2 2026 compared to Q2 2023 in Stevenage.

For the next part of the supply story, we must then look at numbers of Stevenage homes on the market. The average number of homes for sale in Q2 2023 was 642, in Q2 2025, 815 and in Q2 2026, 932. Again, a 45% increase in the number of Stevenage homes for sale in Q2 2026 compared to Q2 2023.

On the demand side of the equation; 369 homes sold STC in Q2 2023, as expected this increased to 459 homes sold STC in Q2 2025 and in Q2 in 2026, this dropped to 372 Stevenage homes sold STC.

So, we’ve had significant increases in the number of Stevenage properties coming on the market for sale and the total number of properties for sale, yet the growth in sales between Q2 2023 and Q2 2026 has only been 0.8%.

Interesting don’t you think?

Final thoughts for Stevenage homeowners thinking of moving

As you can see Stevenage performed in a similar fashion to the UK market and whilst the Stevenage property market is still moving, home sellers are now competing with far more homes than they were three years ago. That does not mean homes are not selling. They are. However, with only around one in two properties coming to market successfully finding a buyer, realistic pricing has never been more important.

Stevenage home sellers who launch at an ambitious figure and hope the market will catch up risk losing valuable time, becoming stale online and eventually having reduced, will more than likely come off the market unsold. (Remember, 80.1% of the homes listed and subsequently sold STC in the UK in 2026 did not have a price reduction). By contrast, the Stevenage homes that are priced correctly from the outset are far more likely to attract viewings, generate competition and secure a sale.

Ultimately, decisions about moving home should still be based on personal circumstances rather than market conditions alone. However, anyone thinking of selling in Stevenage needs to recognise that this is a competitive and price sensitive market.
If you are considering selling or buying in Stevenage, we are always available for a no-obligation conversation and honest advice based on your own circumstances.


Get in touch with us

There is a quiet unspoken problem sitting inside the Blackwater property market.

In the last two years, only 63.93% of the homes that came on the market have ended up selling.

When Britain voted to leave the European Union in June 2016, many experts predicted serious problems for the UK housing market. Forecasts warned of falling house prices, reduced buyer confidence and a prolonged slowdown in property transactions. Yet a decade later, the story has been very different.

avocado property is officially launching in Loughborough and the surrounding areas, with Nick Chawala bringing a fresh, personal and experience-led approach to homeowners, landlords, investors and developers across LE11, LE12, LE13, LE14, LE65 and LE67.